Friday, June 28, 2019

And now for something completely different: NetBSD on the last G4 Mac mini (and making the kernel power failure proof)

(First, as a public service message, if you're running Linux on a G5 you may wish to update the kernel.)

I'm a big fan of NetBSD. I've run it since 2000 on a Mac IIci (of course it's still running it) and I ran it for several years on a Power Mac 7300 with a G3 card which was the second incarnation of the Floodgap gopher server. Today I also still run it on a MIPS-based Cobalt RaQ 2 and an HP Jornada 690. I think NetBSD is a better match for smaller or underpowered systems than current-day Linux, and is fairly easy to harden and keep secure even though none of these systems are exposed to the outside world.

Recently I had a need to set up a bridge system that would be fast enough to connect two networks and I happened to have two of the "secret" last-of-the-line 1.5GHz G4 Mac minis sitting on the shelf doing nothing. Yes, they're probably outclassed by later Raspberry Pi models, but I don't have to buy anything and I like putting old hardware to good use. So here it is, doing serious business, with the total outlay being the cost of one weekend afternoon:

NetBSD/macppc is a fairly mature port, but that doesn't mean it doesn't have bugs. And oddly there do seem to still be some in the install process, at least of the 8.1 release I used, on this last and mightiest of the PowerPC miniatures. Still, once it got set up it's been working great since, so here's a few pointers on getting the 1.5 mini (and current Power Macs generally) running as little NetBSD servers. As most of my readers are Power Mac users and likely to have multiple Power Macs that can aid this process, I will orient this guide to them with some sidebar notes for people trying to pull the mini up all by itself. This machine is configured with 1GB of RAM, the standard 2.5" PATA spinning disk and optical drive, USB 2.0, FireWire 400, Bluetooth and WiFi, using the onboard Radeon 9200 GPU as the console.

The working configuration, hit upon by Sevan Janiyan, is to have an HFS+ partition with the bootloader (called ofwboot.xcf) and the kernel, and then a separate partition for NetBSD's root volume. For some reason the mini goes berserk when trying to boot from a kernel on a NetBSD native partition, but works fine from an HFS+ one. Unfortunately, since the NetBSD installer cannot actually initialize an HFS+ volume, you'll need to do some of the partitioning work in Mac OS X, copy the files there, and then finish the rest. There's a couple ways of skinning that cat, but for many of you this means you'll need not only the NetBSD installer CD, but also a bootable copy of Mac OS X either on disc (i.e., an installer) or a bootable external drive, and some means of copying files.

And that brings us to our first pro tip: the G4 Mac minis had absolutely crap optical drives that would fail if you looked at them crossways. This drive was no exception; it would read commercially pressed CDs but only certain media types of burned CDs and wouldn't read any DVD at all. That means it wouldn't boot from my usual OS X Tiger 10.4.6 install DVD, and the last generation of G4 minis require 10.4, so none of my previous OS X CDs would work.

As it happens, the minimum requirement for the G4/1.5 minis is not actually 10.4.2, yet another Apple lie; it's actually 10.4.0 (though note that some devices like Bluetooth may not work properly). This is fortunate because 10.4.0 was available in CD format and I was able to boot Disk Utility off that Tiger CD instead. Your other option is to bring up the mini in Target Disk Mode (connect over FireWire; hold T down as you turn the mini on until you see a yellow logo on a blue background) from another Power Mac and do the formatting there. In fact, we'll be using Target Disk Mode in a minute, but here I just booted from the CD instead.

In Disk Utility (whether you're doing this on the machine from the Tiger installer or on another machine over FireWire), wipe the mini's current partition scheme and create two new partitions. The first is your HFS+ volume for booting. This particular machine will only run NetBSD, so I made it 512MB to have enough room for multiple kernels and for other files I might need, but if you want a dual-boot system you can make this larger. The second partition will be for NetBSD; I allocated everything else and created it as a UFS ("UNIX File System") partition, though we will divvy it up later. The formatting scheme should look more or less like these screenshots. Shut down the mini when you're done.

Now we boot the NetBSD installer. Bring up the machine in OpenFirmware mode -- all New World Macs use OpenFirmware 3 -- by holding down Command-Option-O-F while powering it on (I advise doing this from a directly-attached USB keyboard). This will bring up the OpenFirmware interface. When you are commanded to do so, release the keys and you will drop to the famous ok prompt. If you're lucky and the evil spirits in your optical drive have been placated by an offering of peanut M&Ms and a young maiden at midnight, you can simply insert the NetBSD install disc and type

boot cd:,\ofwboot.xcf netbsd.macppc

Note the backslash, not a forward slash! If this works properly, then the screen will go black (you don't go back) and enter the Installer proper.

If you get weird errors or OpenFirmware complains the disc is not readable, the optical drive is probably whacked. My drive wouldn't read burned Fujifilm CD-R media (that everything else did), but would read burned Maxell media. If you can't even control for that, you may be able to connect a FireWire CD/DVD reader and boot from it instead. The command would be "something like"

boot fw/node/sbp-2/disk:,\ofwboot.xcf netbsd.macppc

If this didn't work, you may need to snoop around the OpenFirmware device tree to figure out where the device is actually attached, though this should basically work for the G4 mini's single port. Alternatively, you could also try a USB CD-ROM drive, or dding the install image to a USB drive on another computer and booting the mini from that, but the boot string will vary based on which port you connect it to (use dev usb0 and ls to show everything under that port, then dev usb1, etc.). Make sure it is directly connected to the mini. Once you find a device that shows a disk, then "something like" this will work (let's say it was found under usb1):

boot usb1/disk:,\ofwboot.xcf netbsd.macppc

If even that won't work, there are some other ways like netbooting, but this is rather more complicated and I won't talk about it here. Or you could actually fix the drive, I guess ...

When the Installer starts up, choose the option to drop to the shell when it is offered. We will now finish the partitioning from the NetBSD side; we do not use the Installer's built-in partition tool as it will run out of memory. At the shell prompt, type

pdisk /dev/wd0c

When it asks you for a command, type a capital letter P and press RETURN. This will print out the current partition map, which if your mini is similar to mine, should show 4 partitions: the Apple partition map itself, followed by the HFS+ partition, and then by a tiny Apple_Boot partition that is made whenever a UFS volume appears to be the boot volume. (Silly Mac OS X.) You can remove it if you want, but this seemed like more trouble than it was worth for a measly 8.5 megabytes. After that is the space for NetBSD. On my G4 mini, this was partition number 4. Delete this partition by typing a lower-case d, press RETURN, and type 4. Be sure of this number! I will use it in the examples below.

First we will formally create the swap. This is done with the capital letter C command (as shown in the screenshot). Indicate the first block is 4p (i.e., starting at partition 4), for 4194304 blocks (2GB), type Apple_UNIX_SVR2 (don't forget the underscores!), and slice b.

Next is the actual NetBSD root: capital letter C, then saying the first block was 5p (i.e., starting at partition 5, the unallocated section), soaking up the rest of the blocks (however many you see listed under Apple_Free), type Apple_UNIX_SVR2 (don't forget the underscores!), and slice a.

If you did all this right, your screen should look more or less like this:

Verify the partition map one more time with the capital letter P command, then write it out with lower-case w, answering y(es), and then quit with lower-case q. At the shell prompt, return to the installer by typing sysinst and when asked, indicate you will "Use existing partition sizes." The installer will then install the appropriate packages and you can do the initial setup for your clock, the root password, etc. When this is all done, reboot your mini with the left mouse button held down; it will eject the CD (and fail to find a boot volume if you do not have an OS X installation). Shut down the mini.

Before the mini will boot NetBSD, we must copy the kernel and the bootloader to the HFS+ partition. This is where Target Disk Mode comes in handy, because you can just copy directly. Here is my iBook G4 copying a custom kernel (more in a moment):

On the iBook G4, I put in the NetBSD install CD and copied off ofwboot.xcf and netbsd-GENERIC.gz, or you can download them from here and here. They should be copied to the root of the mini's HFS+ volume for the command below to work. For good measure I also uncompressed the gzipped kernel as a failsafe and put a copy of the installation kernel there too, though this isn't necessary. Once the files are copied, eject the mini's drive on the FireWire machine, unplug the FireWire and power the mini off.

If you don't have another Mac around that can talk to the mini over FireWire, you can do this from NetBSD itself, but it's a bit more involved.

Either way, re-enter OpenFirmware with Cmd-Opt-O-F while powering it back up. It's time to boot your new NetBSD machine.

You can see from the screenshot here that the HFS+ volume is considered partition 2, as we left it in pdisk. That means your boot string is

boot hd:,\ofwboot.xcf hd:2/netbsd-GENERIC.gz

Yes, the path to ofwboot still has a backslash, but the argument to ofwboot actually needs a forward slash. NetBSD will start immediately.

There are several minor and one rather obnoxious bug with NetBSD's current support. You will notice a few strange messages on startup as part of the huge mass of text:

oea_startup: failed to allocate DEAD ZONE: error=12
pmu0: power-mgt not configured
pmu0: pmu-pwm-fans not configured
WARNING: 3 errors while detecting hardware; check system log.
bwi0: firmware_open failed on v3/ucode5.fw

I don't know what the first three are, but they appear to be harmless, and appear in many otherwise working dmesg archives (see also this report). The summary WARNING thus can also be politely ignored.

However, the last message is rather obnoxious. Per Sevan the built-in Broadcom WiFi in the Mac mini (detected as bwi0) doesn't work right in NetBSD with more than 512MB of memory, which I refuse to downgrade to, and NetBSD doesn't come with the firmware anyway. Even if you copy it off some other system that does, you won't be able to bring the interface up in the configuration here (you'll just see weird errors about wrong firmware version, etc.).

Since this machine is a bridge and sometimes needs to connect to a test WiFi, I went with a USB WiFi dongle instead (I also use a USB dongle when bridging Ethernet to Ethernet, but pretty much any Ethernet-USB dongle will work too). The one I had on the shelf that I'd bought for something else and then forgot about was a Belkin Wireless G. They sell a number of chipsets under this name, but the model F5D7050 I have here is based on a Ralink RT2501USB chipset that NetBSD sees as rum0, and works fine with wpa_supplicant.

Last but not least was making it "failsafe," with a solid power supply and making it autostarting. Although the G4 mini came with an 85W power supply, I stole the 110W from my 2007 Intel mini and used that so it wouldn't run anywhere near the PSU's capacity and hopefully lengthen its lifetime. As it turns out, this may not have been a problem anyway; most of the time this system is using just 21W on the Kill-A-Watt, maybe 40ish when it's booting.

To autostart NetBSD, ordinarily you would go into OpenFirmware and set boot-device to the bootloader and boot-file to the kernel, as the picture below shows.

However, you'll end up with a black screen or at minimum no console at all on an OpenFirmware 3 system if that's all you do. The magic sauce is to emit some text to the screen before loading the bootloader. Thus, the OpenFirmware settings are (each setenv command is one line):

setenv auto-boot? true
setenv boot-device hd:,\ofwboot.xcf
setenv boot-file hd:2/netbsd-GENERIC.gz (note that I used a different kernel in the screenshot: more in a second)
setenv boot-command ." hi there" cr " screen" output boot
reset-all

The boot-command spacing is especially critical. There is a space after the ." and the quote mark before screen" and after cr is also separated by spaces. The reset-all just tells OpenFirmware to write those settings to NVRAM. If you zap the mini's PRAM with Command-Option-P-R later, you may need to re-enter these.

In this configuration your mini will now start NetBSD automatically when it's turned on (just hold down Command-Option-O-F when starting it up to abort to OpenFirmware). However, this won't bring the machine up automatically after a power failure. While FreeBSD allows starting up after a power failure, this code apparently never made it over to NetBSD. Happily, supporting it merely requires a relatively simple kernel hack. Based on the FreeBSD pmu(4) driver, I created a patch that will automatically reboot any PMU-based NetBSD Power Mac after a power failure.

You should be comfortable with compiling your own kernels in NetBSD; not only is it just good to do for auditing purposes, but you can slim the kernel down substantially or enable other less common features. It's especially easy for NetBSD because all the tools to build it come with a standard installation. All you need to do is download the source and run the build process.

To use this patch, download the source to your home directory on the NetBSD box (you want syssrc.tgz) and download the patch and have it in your home directory as pmu.diff. If you don't have a working curl on your install yet (pkg_add curl, pkg_add mozilla-rootcerts, mozilla-rootcerts install), you may want to download it somewhere else and use scp, sftp or ftp to retrieve it. Then, adjusting as necessary for username and path,

cd /
tar zxf ~/syssrc.tgz
cd /usr/src/sys/arch/macppc/dev
patch -p0 < ~/pmu.diff

Then follow the instructions to make the kernel. I have a pre-built one of 8.1-GENERIC (I call it POWERON) on the gopher server, but you should really roll your own so that you get security fixes, since I may only maintain that kernel intermittently. That build is the one I'm using on the machine currently and on the screenshot above. With this custom kernel installed, when the power is abruptly cut while the machine is powered up it will automatically reboot when power is reapplied, just as the analogous option does in Mac OS X. Copy it to the HFS+ partition and remember to change boot-file to point to it once you've confirmed it works.

Overall, I think the G4 mini makes a fine little server. I wouldn't use it as a client except in Mac OS X itself, and I am forced to admit that even that is becoming less practical these days. But as a little machine to do important back-office tasks and do so reliably, I think NetBSD on the mini is a good choice. Once all the kinks with the installation got ironed out, so far it's been solid and performant especially considering this machine is about 13 years old (though I'm happy with its performance even on thirty-year-old machines). Rather than buying something new, if your needs are small it's probable you've got some old machine around that could do those tasks instead of oozing toxins from its circuit board into a waste dump in Rwanda. And since I had two on the shelf, it has an instant spare. I'll probably be usefully running it for as long as I've run my other NetBSD systems, and that's the highest compliment I think I can pay it.

14 comments:

  1. PPC Minis are the best "Oh Crap" failsafe Mac you can have to backstop PPC. Should an 'Important' PPC system ever completely die, you have perfect access to all your data + USB 2.0 in a package that is very manageable to store in a closet.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for sharing this ... I have one of these and will either try this or freeBSD. oemb1905

    ReplyDelete
  3. Why do you not use GRUB as your bootloader?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Because I don't need to in this configuration, so it's just an unnecessary layer. If I were multibooting it, that would certainly make sense.

      Delete
  4. But... why boot from optical drive which is poor? I think it's more convenient to boot from USB. Mac OS X Installation DVDs have an interesting feature: Take their image and restore it into a USB flash disk of sufficient size using Apple's Utility. Then boot to OF with this flash plugged in, devalias the USB device in form of its address (this pci..../usb..../disk....) as "cd" and just boot the "virtual" cd. I use this trick all time to install OS X into my old Macs with bad CD drives.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Will this work on PPC Macs? I know I've tried something similar on x86 Macs, but with FireWire disks.

      Delete
  5. I understand completely on the bad optical drives thing. Not long after I got my 2005 Mac mini, the MKE drive it shipped with ate its bearings, so as soon as I had the money I replaced with a (much nicer) Pioneer model. As far as I know, the Pioneer still works.

    That Mac mini has been dual-booting Tiger and Linux recently, but with Debian having dropped big-endian PowerPC support, this will come in handy.

    ReplyDelete
  6. You wrote "I wouldn't use it as a client " but I'm wondering if there would be a speed improvement if using NetBSD on a Mini G4 exclusively for web browsing and mail?
    I have never used anything else than MacOS on my Macs, but I'm curious... ;-)
    From what I've read after your post, available web browsers are quite limited under NetBSD and you need an emulator to run say TenFourfox, did I understand right?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's been my impression, though I also have to add that I have only ever used NetBSD as a server, never as a desktop. Sevan is probably the best one to ask about available options.

      Delete
    2. Thanks! I've searched for the Sevan you mentioned but couldn't find a contact, have you got any idea of how to reach for him?

      Delete
    3. Sevan's page is www.geeklan.co.uk

      Delete
  7. Mr. Cameron Kaiser, did you know that now we can run Mac OS 9.2.2 natively on all G4 Mac minis? Google it up, it's on MacOS9Lives' forums! It's like the perfect OS on the perfect machine, with GPU acceleration and all!

    Also, 10.4 isn't quiiiiite the lowest Mac OS X version you can install. Even the 1.5GHz Mac mini is 100% compatible with Mac OS X Server 10.3.4, Server 10.3.9 and "Client" 10.3.7 Panther (the latter only if you pick up the Panther DVD intended for the earlier G4 minis and spoof the machine ID from "PowerMac10,1" to "PowerMac10,2". Full instructions: http://macintoshgarden.org/forum/mac-mini-g4-panther-install-dvd#comment-62849 )

    I am a proud owner of three 1.5GHz G4 Mac minis. Mac OS 9.2.2 is a must! And this machine is perfect!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Although the 9.2.2 hacks that float around sometimes come with various compromises, good to hear that 10.3.7 will boot these also. I think those steps, though exotic, are well within the skill set of someone who would want to run NetBSD or Linux on one.

      Delete
    2. Rest assured, no "various compromises". What is amazing about the 9.2.2 "hack" is that it's not 9.2.2 itself that was hacked (it is left immaculate and untouched! 100% pure!), but rather the ROM file, slightly tinkered so that 9.2.2 finishes the boot process normally.

      The only compromise is that you'll need to use something other than the internal speakers for audio (which is a good idea for any OS for it), preferably with a USB audio adapter. Other than that, there's only the extremely minor issue it won't truly sleep, and the "Apple CD/DVD Player" won't run. Nothing else like that.

      You're right about GNU/Linux and BSD, though. I have tried installing _everything_ this machine can take, even, ugh, MorphOS (which is full of issues and, like everything Amiga, I'm not a big fan of). I also favor NetBSD over the rest, much thanks to you, btw!

      Delete

Due to an increased frequency of spam, comments are now subject to moderation.